Ange Postecoglou’s side came from a goal down to win comfortably against their London rivals. Check out the best facts and Opta data in our Tottenham vs West Ham stats page.
Tottenham brushed off the memories of their agonising 3-2 defeat at Brighton last time out as they came from behind to ease to a 4-1 win over West Ham on Saturday.
Mohammed Kudus gave the visitors the lead in the 18th minute, only for Dejan Kulusevski to equalise when his shot hit both posts and crossed the line nine minutes before the break at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
Three goals in eight minutes leading up to the hour mark killed the game as Yves Bissouma, an Alphonse Areola own goal and Son Heung-min put things to bed.
Kudus made it an even worse afternoon for Julen Lopetegui’s men as he was sent off for raising his hands into the faces of both Micky van de Ven and Pape Sarr with four minutes remaining.
It was West Ham’s heaviest Premier League defeat after scoring the opening goal since January 2013, when they were beaten 5-1 at Arsenal.
Our Opta match centre delivers you all the Tottenham vs West Ham stats from their Premier League meeting at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
The match centre below includes team and player stats, expected goals data, passing networks, an Opta chalkboard and more. It gives you everything you need to do your own in-game and post-match analysis.
Underneath the match centre you can find the official Opta stats on the game as well.
Tottenham vs West Ham: Post-Match Facts
Since the start of last season, Tottenham have won eight of the 12 home Premier League games in which they have conceded first (L4) – this is at least twice as many home wins after falling 1-0 behind as any other side in the competition in this time.
Tottenham have kept just one clean sheet across their last 19 home Premier League games (a 4-0 victory over Everton in August), while Spurs’ one clean sheet on home soil in 2024 is the joint-fewest shutouts among ever-present sides in the competition (alongside Nottingham Forest, West Ham and Wolves).
Since the start of last season, only Sheffield United (seven) have conceded more own goals in the Premier League than West Ham (five), while Tottenham have benefitted from more own goals than any other side in the competition across that period (seven).
Mohammed Kudus became the first West Ham player to both score and receive a red card in a Premier League match since Nayef Aguerd vs Chelsea in August 2023, while he is just the sixth different Hammers player to have done so in the competition (eight occasions).